Absolutely, and it's across the full, complete, broad policy spectrum that this 2% cap applies. I'm focused in on one area—education—which has a lot to do with potential for economic development. Economic development, because of the 2% cap, is completely stifled right now.
If I can just add one other piece, if we were to close that gap, the contribution to the Canadian economy up to 2026, so just over 15 years, would be $160 billion contribution of first nations' participation in the mainstream economy, if we were able to eliminate that gap. So it's significant that we consider this as an investment and a stimulus to the national economy.